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Could third rail electrification avoid the requirement for GWR 769s?

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Mikey C

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The fact that the above ideas would never get beyond speculation in the UK shows that there is no sincere value placed on safety, only money.
But the railways are a very safe form of transport anyway. No government is going to spend vast sums of money converting already electrified railway lines from 3rd rail to OHLE just to marginally improve rail safety, when we have a massive number of unelectrified railways to deal with first, never mind the NHS, social care, education etc
 
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zwk500

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It's not really its simply risk assessment that falls on Network Rail as the risk holder. If new third rail is deemed too risky not to have a replacement timetable for existing systems 25 years after the risks were identified is criminal. If network rail had identified the risk and Govt had declined funding that would be politics.
New third rail is not banned outright, but is subject to a very strong safety case (East London Line being case in point). I dont know the exact process behind the decision making for not replacing existing 3rd rail installations , but I'd be rather surprised if the question of how it was paid for had not come up.
Nr has previously published electrification strategies that identify lines or areas where 3rd rail should be replaced, but never been granted funding for them, such as the Electric spine proposal for Southampton.
 

ComUtoR

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Track gangs can count to 3, they're well aware which railway they're working on.

If you looked at the reports I've seen in the past few weeks; you would rethink that statement.
 

Railwaysceptic

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One person's balance if different to another's. Currently the ORR's balanced view is that only minor extensions will be allowed.
No-one is asking for more than a few minor extensions such as the North Downs Line, Basingstoke to Salisbury and Ashford to Ore.
 

AM9

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No-one is asking for more than a few minor extensions such as the North Downs Line, Basingstoke to Salisbury and Ashford to Ore.
That is your idea of a 'minor extension'. Judging by the implementation of the ruling so far, it would seem that the ORR doesn't agree that it is minor. The most notable extension of 3rd rail since the ruling was the link from just north of Peckham Queens Road to the flying junction were it joins the main route to Brockley, a distance of about 1.4Km. In addition, the track from the Peckham Junction to the bridges by Millwall Stadium about 65% of the total extension, is elevated on a viaduct, virtualy eradicating access to members of the public, so the ORR probably accepted that as justifying a 'small extension'.
Does any proposal on the NDL meet those sort of criteria?
 

Bikeman78

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it falls over every winter!
Apart from the cost and risk of harm to people.
'The risk of death is reduced because we're sacking all the maintenance staff' is a poor logic. Even though there's less staff, there still be the same number of people on a worksite. And 'modernisation' will not change working methods, because to invest in kit and research requires cash that NR simply doesn't have and there's not going to be any more forthcoming from Whitehall.
Most of the country falls over when it snows.

As regards safety, with red zone working being phased out, it ought to be possible to switch off the power most of the time when people are working on the track. Anyway, outdated or not, any third rail train is still better than a 769. A 1970s Tadpole unit would be better than a 769!
 

Bald Rick

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It seems a bit extreme to propose electrification simply because some rolling stock engineers can’t get a train to work properly.

Isn’t the answer to spend some money to make the trains work, or if that fails, buy some trains that do work?
 

brad465

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it falls over every winter!
When it snows hard enough, everything falls over, whether third rail, OHLE or no electrification, because the snow physically blocks the lines and can damage rolling stock, as happened in 2018.

It seems a bit extreme to propose electrification simply because some rolling stock engineers can’t get a train to work properly.

Isn’t the answer to spend some money to make the trains work, or if that fails, buy some trains that do work?
Were 769s always planned, or were they in part brought about by the incomplete job of electrification? If the Thames branches and Didcot-Oxford had been completed as originally specified, then surely no bi/tri-mode would have been necessary for them, leaving the only focus the North Downs line.
 

JonathanH

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It seems a bit extreme to propose electrification simply because some rolling stock engineers can’t get a train to work properly.
That is a bit of a leap. The 769s seem to work to some extent. The working conditions for traincrew on 769s aren't acceptable in the modern age.

Isn’t the answer to spend some money to make the trains work, or if that fails, buy some trains that do work?
No, it is to keep the Turbos going doing the work they have been doing for the last 30 years.

Were 769s always planned, or were they in part brought about by the incomplete job of electrification? If the Thames branches and Didcot-Oxford had been completed as originally specified, then surely no bi/tri-mode would have been necessary for them, leaving the only focus the North Downs line.
Reading to Basingstoke wasn't due for electrification. 769s were never intended for Didcot to Oxford.

769s weren't directly linked to failure of the electrification plans not being completed. They were a way of releasing Turbos for other work.
 

Bikeman78

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It seems a bit extreme to propose electrification simply because some rolling stock engineers can’t get a train to work properly.

Isn’t the answer to spend some money to make the trains work, or if that fails, buy some trains that do work?
They wouldn't need to buy new trains for a while. Simply stop scrapping some of the older ones.
 

JonathanH

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They wouldn't need to buy new trains for a while. Simply stop scrapping some of the older ones.
Trying to put GWR drivers in the cab of a 455 isn't going to be any easier that getting them to drive a 769.
 

tomuk

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IMHO this post says it all and is balanced.

Efficiency is not as good either as I^2R losses will always be higher.
No ORR\RSSB should be told to stop being obstinate and allow reasonable infill schemes, that being any extension of Merseyrail, Ashford-Ore, Uckfield, North Downs. I would also give consideration to Reading- Basingstoke-Salisbury-Southampton

The RSSB report suggested that 3rd was a slightly higher risk than the very low risk 25kv OHLE. Another inference from the report that doesn't seem to be be publicised is that in most cases contact with 25kv equals death or at least v serious injuries with 750V the were a lot of contacts which lead to only minor injuries.
 

RobShipway

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769s were never intended for Didcot to Oxford
I know that Wikipedia is not always correct, but if the class 769 units where never intended for Didcot to Oxford, why does the class 769 wikipedia details state the following:

Although initially planned for use in London and the Thames Valley, while 12 Class 387 units were modified for Heathrow Express services, the future plan for these units will be operating on services between Oxford, Reading and Gatwick Airport, which would mean operating on non-electrified, 25 kV AC OHLE and 750 V DC third-rail routes. To enable this, Great Western Railway's allocation of Class 769 units will retain their dual-voltage capability in addition to being fitted with diesel power units. The units will also receive an internal refurbishment and be fitted with air cooling.[28]

The first Class 769 to be delivered to Great Western Rail was 769943 which was delivered to Reading TMD in August 2020. It was expected to enter the service in early 2021.[29] The Class 769 was expected to enter service with Great Western Railway between June and December 2021,[30] but later delayed to 2022.

The above says that plan services for the class 769 units is Oxford, Reading and Gatwick Airport. So surely this would include services that maybe Oxford - Reading or Oxford - London Paddington, which surely would include Didcot to Oxford?

I have not been able to find it, but I also remember GWR stating the same.
 

Bald Rick

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No, it is to keep the Turbos going doing the work they have been doing for the last 30 years.

Perhaps ‘use’ rather than ‘buy’ would have been a better choice of word in my post.

== Doublepost prevention - post automatically merged: ==

The working conditions for traincrew on 769s aren't acceptable in the modern age.

genuine question - in what way?
 

zwk500

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When it snows hard enough, everything falls over, whether third rail, OHLE or no electrification, because the snow physically blocks the lines and can damage rolling stock, as happened in 2018.
Third rail ices up a lot quicker than OLE or sets of points.
No-one is asking for more than a few minor extensions such as the North Downs Line, Basingstoke to Salisbury and Ashford to Ore.
These are not minor extensions. Extending the 3rd rail to North camp and Shalford would be minor extensions.
I would also give consideration to Reading- Basingstoke-Salisbury-Southampton
Reading -Basingtoke should be OLE regardless. The service is operated by GWR from Reading depot, OLE is better and it wouldn't need any additional power feeds. Oh, and the signalling on the line is already 25kv immunised whereas 750v immunisation only goes a short way up the branch at the Basingstoke end.
The RSSB report suggested that 3rd was a slightly higher risk than the very low risk 25kv OHLE. Another inference from the report that doesn't seem to be be publicised is that in most cases contact with 25kv equals death or at least v serious injuries with 750V the were a lot of contacts which lead to only minor injuries.
'Only' minor injuries are still not nice for the poor sound who's got to deal with them, or their friends who saw them get injured. More frequent occurrence of less-but-still serious incidents vs less frequent but very serious is a difficult balancing act though.
 

Snow1964

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For a number of years the argument against extending the third rail was a safety one (danger of electrocution).

What it tended to be was a risk of increasing the network 1-2% of doing the infills vs lots of hidden risks, (diesel spills, diesel emissions and fumes, slips from spilt fuel, additional work under trains to maintain engines etc). Effectively the safety equation was rubbish as the alternative extra risks were not being included because harder to quantify.

The chance of event numbers are tiny, someone getting electrocuted on one metre of track out of something like 3 million route metres of third rail is a very small number. Not 100% zero, but then accidents with diesel are also not 100% zero.

Now if a 769 fails every 1000 miles, that it a much higher risk as someone might have to inspect it, and operate some solebar level switches in areas with third rail.

How quick could the infills be done, with minor routes with big white (no train) periods each night, third rails could be laid within months. Substations nowadays need a concrete base and a crane as all made off-site. In nearly every example existing substations could power the first 1.5 - 2 miles of route. Connecting it up would probably be slowest part, but realistically not much funky design needed, it’s all standard parts so if there is a will could be done within 24 months
 

JonathanH

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genuine question - in what way?
It was set out in discussion here - https://www.railforums.co.uk/thread...mation-discussion.174866/page-17#post-5027788 - the air conditioning issue, cramped conditions, and drivers seat issues were all cited by posters as objections staff have had, along with the fact that many of the drivers would end up with 769s as their primary workplace. Basically that asking staff to work in a new workplace designed 30-odd years ago is not accepted by those staff.
 

AM9

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For a number of years the argument against extending the third rail was a safety one (danger of electrocution).

What it tended to be was a risk of increasing the network 1-2% of doing the infills vs lots of hidden risks, (diesel spills, diesel emissions and fumes, slips from spilt fuel, additional work under trains to maintain engines etc). Effectively the safety equation was rubbish as the alternative extra risks were not being included because harder to quantify.

The chance of event numbers are tiny, someone getting electrocuted on one metre of track out of something like 3 million route metres of third rail is a very small number. Not 100% zero, but then accidents with diesel are also not 100% zero.

Now if a 769 fails every 1000 miles, that it a much higher risk as someone might have to inspect it, and operate some solebar level switches in areas with third rail.

How quick could the infills be done, with minor routes with big white (no train) periods each night, third rails could be laid within months. Substations nowadays need a concrete base and a crane as all made off-site. In nearly every example existing substations could power the first 1.5 - 2 miles of route. Connecting it up would probably be slowest part, but realistically not much funky design needed, it’s all standard parts so if there is a will could be done within 24 months
Electrification (including obsolescent systems like 3rd rail) is a long-term investment, typically 30-40 years before significant refurbishment and towards 120 years for complete replacement. Keeping a largely experimental modification of 30 year old EMUs in service is an altogether different decision, and if the service is important enough to even consider a non-approved electrification model to mitigate reliability or driver compatibility issues with the 769s, then there must be more than enough cash sloshing around to procure a few new battery/ac/DC multiple units from a bona fide manufacturer. That would meet all the issues about diesels and pollution, more 3rd rail, and problems with 30+ year-old rolling stock.
 

Minstral25

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Third rail ices up a lot quicker than OLE or sets of points.

I can't remember the last time Ice caused issues on Thameslink to London from Redhill, but many many times in-between has blown down OLE north of London stopped services on the Third Rail section
 

zwk500

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I can't remember the last time Ice caused issues on Thameslink to London from Redhill, but many many times in-between has blown down OLE north of London stopped services on the Third Rail section
The OLE on large parts of the ECML is a known problem, and the MML isn't much better as both were done rather cheaply using headspans and wide spacing, so it doesn't take much to knock them out. There's currently a refurbishment programme to change headspans for Gantries (not sure on timescales). Meanwhile the third rail in winter has to have nightly departmental trains running anti-icing and de-icing circuits over the entire network to prevent freezing over the top and preventing contact.
 

Trainbike46

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Add Ore-Ashford and Uckfield in, and get rid of these silly anomalies. Overhead would make no sense for these tiny stretches.
I'm not sure this is fair. Even though the electrification infills in the sothern 3rd rail area are small, loads of stock used exclusively on 3rd rail services is already capable of running on OHLE, so it really wouldn't matter if there were a few OHLE islands in southern 3rd rail land

== Doublepost prevention - post automatically merged: ==

The one place I waver is Reading to Basingstoke, and what that should be, as there is genuinely an argument for both - which both feature at Reading:
If the shuttle is more important, with a chance of Paddington services - wire it.
If Reading has a future of being a secondary SWT terminus, well, third rail makes more sense but doesn't do much for the Exeter or Warminster lines, only the Winchester routes.
As this line is in between OHLE and 3rd rail territory, it should clearly be electrified with OHLE for the safety and efficiency benefits, even if the SWR service becomes more important. Dual-voltage rolling stock really isn't that expensive, and loads of trains switch between OHLE and 3rd rail multiple times every day.
 
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JohnRegular

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A related question for the electrification experts- how compatible are things like substations, grid connections, etc. between third rail and OLE installations?

For example, if Basingstoke-Salisbury was electrified with third rail (which I don't think it should be but let's just suppose), with a view to eventual, long term future conversion to OLE, how much of the infrastructure would need ripping out and replacing (other than the actual third rail)?

Another question is, how safe can third rail be made? Obviously there are side and bottom contact systems (e.g. DLR), but one would think it possible that a modified design, compatible with current trains, could reduce risk to track workers. Maybe covered sides? Having the rail mostly enclosed in some kind of trench that shoegear can get into but makes accidental contact less likely? I have no idea, but surely in nearly 100 years we can do a bit better with third rail.
 

paul1609

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It was set out in discussion here - https://www.railforums.co.uk/thread...mation-discussion.174866/page-17#post-5027788 - the air conditioning issue, cramped conditions, and drivers seat issues were all cited by posters as objections staff have had, along with the fact that many of the drivers would end up with 769s as their primary workplace. Basically that asking staff to work in a new workplace designed 30-odd years ago is not accepted by those staff.
The answer of course is to upgrade the largely metro systems these vehicles would work on to a modern operating system like Dubai or Singapore that doesn't need a drivers compartment at all.
 

AM9

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I'm not sure this is fair. Even though the electrification infills in the sothern 3rd rail area are small, loads of stock used exclusively on 3rd rail services is already capable of running on OHLE, so it really wouldn't matter if there were a few OHLE islands in southern 3rd rail land
That was one of the DfT's better decisions to force all mainline stock to either be capable of OLE operation or at least retrofittable for it. It has driven the architecture of the traction power system such that most new trains can be offered for DC, ac or both requirements.
 

JonathanH

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The answer of course is to upgrade the largely metro systems these vehicles would work on to a modern operating system like Dubai or Singapore that doesn't need a drivers compartment at all.
A future with trains that have no drivers isn't going to happen on the unelectrified and barely signalled (ie long blocks) North Downs Line though.
 

Energy

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Substations nowadays need a concrete base and a crane as all made off-site.
... and a national grid supply.
I know that Wikipedia is not always correct, but if the class 769 units where never intended for Didcot to Oxford, why does the class 769 wikipedia details state the following:

Although initially planned for use in London and the Thames Valley, while 12 Class 387 units were modified for Heathrow Express services, the future plan for these units will be operating on services between Oxford, Reading and Gatwick Airport, which would mean operating on non-electrified, 25 kV AC OHLE and 750 V DC third-rail routes. To enable this, Great Western Railway's allocation of Class 769 units will retain their dual-voltage capability in addition to being fitted with diesel power units. The units will also receive an internal refurbishment and be fitted with air cooling.[28]

The first Class 769 to be delivered to Great Western Rail was 769943 which was delivered to Reading TMD in August 2020. It was expected to enter the service in early 2021.[29] The Class 769 was expected to enter service with Great Western Railway between June and December 2021,[30] but later delayed to 2022.

The above says that plan services for the class 769 units is Oxford, Reading and Gatwick Airport. So surely this would include services that maybe Oxford - Reading or Oxford - London Paddington, which surely would include Didcot to Oxford?

I have not been able to find it, but I also remember GWR stating the same.
From the original announcements, Reading to Gatwick and Reading to Oxford. There was talk of them running to London but given their unreliability I doubt GWR want them on the GWML.
 

JonathanH

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From the original announcements, Reading to Gatwick and Reading to Oxford. There was talk of them running to London but given their unreliability I doubt GWR want them on the GWML.
That conflicts with this though.
https://www.railforums.co.uk/threads/gwr-class-165-166-turbo-diagrams.157030/page-23#post-4399617

There was never talk of them running to London, or even being cleared East of Maidenhead.

Reading to Oxford was an option if the order had been increased from the initial 19 to 23.

However, I agree that the initial press release does mention Reading to Oxford - https://www.railforums.co.uk/thread...ally-for-northern.138660/page-51#post-3430238 - seems a bit strange that all subsequent discussion has not included that with it being clear that they were not intended for Reading / Didcot to Oxford services because it meant that only Reading traincrew need to be trained.
 
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A0

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But the railways are a very safe form of transport anyway. No government is going to spend vast sums of money converting already electrified railway lines from 3rd rail to OHLE just to marginally improve rail safety, when we have a massive number of unelectrified railways to deal with first, never mind the NHS, social care, education etc

On its own - no safety won't be the reason.

However, what *may* be the reason will be life-expired 3rd rail equipment which may need to be updated and re-electrifying using OHLE may unlock other benefits. An example is that OHLE may allow more trains to run, particularly those which have high current draw - so if you were looking at Basingstoke to Southampton, it might allow the electrification of freights running from Southampton to the Midlands and beyond, which are currently all diesel hauled.

It'll come down to which is worse - a DMU shuttling along a branch every couple of hours or several heavy freight locos belching diesel fumes into the atmosphere ?
 

AM9

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A related question for the electrification experts- how compatible are things like substations, grid connections, etc. between third rail and OLE installations?

For example, if Basingstoke-Salisbury was electrified with third rail (which I don't think it should be but let's just suppose), with a view to eventual, long term future conversion to OLE, how much of the infrastructure would need ripping out and replacing (other than the actual third rail)?
The setup for a 60km long section like Basingstoke to Salisbury would I imagine be covered by no more than two simple grid feeds, especially if it was done at the same time a Reading to Basingstoke where the line passes the Bramley 400kV substation, and one of it's 400kV supergrid lines almost parallels the line to Andover.
If it was DC, there would need to be a new exclusive 33kV line run from Worting Junction all the way to Salisbury, with converter stations every few km to feed the track.

Another question is, how safe can third rail be made? Obviously there are side and bottom contact systems (e.g. DLR), but one would think it possible that a modified design, compatible with current trains, could reduce risk to track workers. Maybe covered sides? Having the rail mostly enclosed in some kind of trench that shoegear can get into but makes accidental contact less likely? I have no idea, but surely in nearly 100 years we can do a bit better with third rail.
If it was that easy it would already have been done. Any change to the actual point of collection, (e.g. side or bottom contact) would cause massive disruption for a number of years. There would be modifications to the shoe lowering mechanism on hundreds of Electrostars and throughout the conversion period, through running would be serverely restricted. It could also cause ballast issues wherever the trains were taken.
 
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XAM2175

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I know that Wikipedia is not always correct, but if the class 769 units where never intended for Didcot to Oxford, why does the class 769 wikipedia details state the following:

Although initially planned for use in London and the Thames Valley, while 12 Class 387 units were modified for Heathrow Express services, the future plan for these units will be operating on services between Oxford, Reading and Gatwick Airport, which would mean operating on non-electrified, 25 kV AC OHLE and 750 V DC third-rail routes. To enable this, Great Western Railway's allocation of Class 769 units will retain their dual-voltage capability in addition to being fitted with diesel power units. The units will also receive an internal refurbishment and be fitted with air cooling.[28]

The first Class 769 to be delivered to Great Western Rail was 769943 which was delivered to Reading TMD in August 2020. It was expected to enter the service in early 2021.[29] The Class 769 was expected to enter service with Great Western Railway between June and December 2021,[30] but later delayed to 2022.


The above says that plan services for the class 769 units is Oxford, Reading and Gatwick Airport. So surely this would include services that maybe Oxford - Reading or Oxford - London Paddington, which surely would include Didcot to Oxford?

I have not been able to find it, but I also remember GWR stating the same.
The following references are cited as the source for that information:
  1. "GWR to lease Class 769 Flex 'trimode' trainsets". Railway Gazette. 20 April 2018. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
  2. Great Western Railway receives the UK’s first tri-mode train - Great Western Railway. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  3. "GWR aims for 2021 'Flex' introduction". Rail Express. May 2021. p. 26.
 
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